This is something I came across with my wife's Lenovo 2-in-1, where Lenovo has the device set up to only accept Intel drivers from Lenovo, yet doesn't provide any new drivers since that device is no longer made or sold.
Device manufacturers can add their own branding to component drivers these companies themselves don't create. And in the case of Intel graphics & audio drivers for Intel CPUs, they can optionally configure those drivers so that future driver updates won't install unless they come from the manufacturer of the device. The problem is that once a device is no longer being sold, the manufacturer has zero incentive to release new driver versions as they become available. Since newer driver versions may be necessary for win10 compatibility, as well as include stuff like security fixes, this is Not a good thing.
The fix itself is rather simple, though it does have some risk, so please have a complete backup image that you know you can restore ready. If you have a device [e.g. laptop or tablet] with both an Intel CPU/GPU and a 2nd GPU research 1st, because you may need special drivers, and this may not work.
The 1st step is to find out if there are newer graphics drivers available from Intel, & if so, download them -- you need the .zip file version, and it's good to have the .exe version too. This is often trickier than it should be. You'll need to know the model number of the Intel CPU, not just whether it's an i3 or i5 or i7 etc., & then Google. You may find the Intel Ark page for the CPU, which *may* have links to drivers, or you may find links to the driver page itself. You can visit the page for Intel's Download Center, but the graphics drivers are listed by the generation and code name for that generation of Intel CPU, which you may not know, and can take some research to find out. As a safeguard, the actual driver download page will have a long list of CPU model numbers that are compatible.
At the top of the Download Center page there's also a link to install Intel's Driver & Support Assistant. It'll run every time Windows starts, and automatically check for updates, though it may not tell you it found an update -- right click the icon in the notification area of the Task Bar for status. If you click to check for updates this assistant will open an Intel site in your default browser, and after running a scan, if there's a newer driver available, will offer to download & install it for you. If you have it install a graphics driver, & your device is set up to only allow drivers from the maker of the device, the install will fail.
downloadcenter.intel[.]com
Next un-zip the .zip file for the graphics driver, and open Device Mgr. Microsoft says just type Device Manager in the search box, or you can find it in Control Panel. You should see a device called Display adapters - click the arrow & it'll show the name for the GPU. Right click that & select Update driver, which will open a window asking how you want to search. Select Browse my computer... & then in the new window that opens, up top browse to the folder where you un-zipped the driver files. The new driver should install, and after a restart I recommend running the driver .exe file to make sure everything got installed, which will also require a restart. From now on you should be able to update Intel graphics drivers normally.
The risk is that Microsoft has changed, & will probably continue to change the way drivers should work in Windows, and Intel changes the way their drivers work in response. When you update Intel graphics drivers via Device Mgr. you don't always get the complete package, so depending on what changed in the new version, there's a chance that things can break, which is why you need to have that backup handy.